
|
Like Thessaloniki, the city was part of the
Ottoman Empire until the Balkan Wars in the early 20th century, when it was liberated by Greece. |
| There were 900 Jews
in Kastoria in 1940. On March 25, 1944, 763 Jews were rounded up for deportation, first to Thessaloniki and then
to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Prior to their deportation, they were enclosed
in an abandoned school for days, with no food or water, and the young
girls were raped by German soldiers. Thirty-five Jews survived the Holocaust
in Kastoria, and only one Jewish family remains after 500 years of a Jewish
presence in the city. Recently a Holocaust memorial was erected in Kastoria
to acknowledge the loss of the city’s Jews. |
| Kastoria is located
in the mountains between Thessaloniki and Ioannina, on an ancient trade
route. The city became famous for manufacturing fur and leather items,
an occupation in which many of Kastoria’s Jews were employed. Kastoria
was a Sephardic community, although there is evidence that a Jewish community existed there before the |




|
Dedication of Holocaust
Memorial 1996 Jewish Museum of Greece |
|
Kastoria today |
| Chief Rabbi Isaac Menachem
Zacharia and family of Kastoria, Greece, 1904. Jewish Museum of Greece |